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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
CHAPTER 2
ACCOUNTING UNDER IDEAL CONDITIONS
2.1
Overview
2.2
The Present Value Model Under Certainty
2.2.1 Summary
2.3
The Present Value Model Under Uncertainty
2.3.1 Summary
2.4
Examples of Present Value Accounting
2.4.1 Embedded Value
2.4.2 Reserve Recognition Accounting (RRA)
2.4.3 Critique of RRA
2.4.4 Summary of RRA
2.5
Historical Cost Accounting Revisited
2.5.1 Comparison of Different Measurement Bases
2.5.2 Conclusion
2.6
The Non-Existence of True Net Income
2.7
Conclusion to Accounting Under Ideal Conditions
LEARNING OBJECTIVES AND SUGGESTED TEACHING APPROACHES
1.
To Appreciate the Concept of Ideal Conditions
This concept is drawn on throughout the book. Roughly speaking, by ideal conditions I
mean conditions where future firm cash flows and interest rates are known with
certainty or, if not known with certainty, where there is a complete and publicly known
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
set of states of nature and associated objective probabilities which enables a completely
relevant and reliable expected present value of the firm to be calculated.
I assume risk-neutral investors in this Chapter, so that valuation of the firm is on the
basis of expected present value, that is, no adjustment for risk is needed. The concept
of a risk-averse investor is introduced in Section 3.4, and a capital asset pricing model
of the firmโs shares is described in Section 4.5.
2.
To Use the Present Value Model Under Ideal Conditions to Prepare an
Articulated Set of Financial Statements for a Simple Firm
The text limits itself to financial statements for the first year of operations. The problem
material extends the accounting to a subsequent year (see problems 1, 2, 3, 5, 15, and
19). In subsequent years, the firm earns interest on opening cash balance. This is
picked up by the accretion of discount calculation, since cash is included in opening net
assets. Interest earned on cash balances leads naturally to the role of dividends in
present-value accounting and the concept of dividend irrelevance.
3.
To Critically Evaluate Reserve Recognition Accounting (RRA) as an
Application of the Present Value Model
I usually allow some class time to criticize the assumptions of ideal conditions. Some
students want to โblow off steamโ because they perceive these assumptions as quite
strong. I find that RRA is an excellent vehicle both to motivate and critique present
value-based accounting. The fact that it is on line encourages students to take the
present value model seriously, which I emphasize by basing class discussion on an
example of RRA disclosure for a Canadian oil and gas firm that also reports to the SEC.
Such disclosures are usually in SEC Form 40-F, not in the annual report (which says
something about managementโs view of RRA).
I also emphasize the point that present value-based accounting products run into
severe implementation problems when the ideal conditions they need do not hold.
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
I sometimes receive comments that the text over-emphasizes RRA. I find RRA so
helpful to illustrate numerous course concepts that I have resisted such comments.
However, instructors may wish to emphasize that RRA, based on a United States
accounting standard, is relevant to Canadian oil and gas firms whose shares are traded
in the United States. In this regard, it is worth noting that Husky Energy Inc., used as the
text RRA illustration in Section 2.4.2, is a Canadian-based corporation.
4.
Historical Cost Accounting in the Mixed Measurement Model
Instructors may wish to discuss historical cost accounting in relation to current value
accounting, since historical cost is still an important component of the mixed
measurement model. Section 2.5 compares these measurement bases in terms of
relevance and reliability, timing of revenue recognition, recognition lag, and matching.
This is a good place to emphasize the trade-off between relevance and reliability, and
how different measurement bases imply different trade-offs.
This is also a good place to discuss the relative importance of the balance sheet and
income statements under the two measurement bases. That is, historical cost
accounting takes the view that the income statement is of greater importance because it
gives the current installment of the firmโs earning power, and provides a place to start to
predict future firm performance. Under current value accounting, the balance sheet is of
greater performance, the argument being that current values of assets and liabilities
provides a better prediction of future firm performance.
6.
To Question the Existence of Net Income as a Well-Defined Economic
Construct
I use the reliability problems of RRA to question the existence of โtrueโ economic
income except under ideal conditions. With the text example, or some other example, of
RRA disclosure in front of us, I ask the students if they would be willing to pay the RRA
value for the proved reserves of an oil and gas company. Discussion usually brings out
a negative response, for reasons such as difficulties in assessing expected quantities
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
and prices, disagreement with a 10% discount rate, possible inside information about
costs, additional reserves, etc.
I then point out that there are numerous other assets and liabilities for which a quoted
market price does not exist, and argue that information asymmetry is a major reason
why market prices may not exist. The market for used cars and problems surrounding
insurance markets in the presence of adverse selection and moral hazard provide other
examples of โmissingโ markets.
Having established that there are not quoted market prices available for โeverything,โ I
point out that it is then impossible to fully value a firm on this basis and, as a result, it is
also impossible to measure true economic income. I take a sort of perverse pleasure in
asking those students who are heading for a professional accounting career if they
really want to devote their lives to measuring something which does not exist. I am
careful to end on an upbeat note, however, by pointing out that lack of a true measure
of income means that a large amount of judgement is required to come up with a useful
measure, and that judgement is the basis of a profession.
I usually do not go further than the above intuitive argument that incomplete markets are
at the heart of problems of income measurement. However, instructors who wish to dig
into incompleteness more deeply and precisely can assign Beaver & Demskiโs โThe
Nature of Income Measurementโ (The Accounting Review, January, 1979).
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Suggested Solutions to Questions and Problems
1.
P.V. Ltd.
Income Statement for Year 2
Accretion of discount (10% ร 286.36)
$28.64
P.V. Ltd.
Balance Sheet
As at Time 2
Financial Asset
Cash
Shareholdersโ Equity
$315.00
Opening balance
Net income
$286.36
28.64
Capital Asset
Present value
0.00
$315.00
$315.00
Note that cash includes interest at 10% on opening cash balance of $150.
2.
Suppose that P.V. Ltd. paid a dividend of $10 at the end of year 1 (any portion of
year 1 net income would do). Then, its year 2 opening net assets are $276.36,
and net income would be:
P.V. Ltd.
Income Statement
For Year 2
Accretion of discount (10% ร 276.36)
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$27.64
Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
P.V.โs balance sheet at time 2 would be:
P.V. Ltd.
Balance Sheet
As at Time 2
Financial Asset
Shareholdersโ Equity
Cash: (140 + 14 + 150)
$304.00
Opening balance:
$276.36
(286.36 – 10.00 dividend)
Capital Asset, at
Present value
Net income
27.64
0.00
$304.00
$304.00
Thus, at time 2 the shareholders have:
Cash from dividend
$10.00
Interest at 10% on cash dividend, for year 2
Value of firm per balance sheet
1.00
304.00
$315.00
This is the same value as that of the firm at time 2, assuming P.V. Ltd. paid no
dividends (see Question 1). Consequently, the firmโs dividend policy does not
matter to the shareholders under ideal conditions. Note that a crucial requirement
here, following from ideal conditions, is that the investors and the firm both earn
interest on financial assets, including reinvested dividends, at the same rate of
return.
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Note also that if the investor spends the dividend rather than investing it, this
must be because he/she values current consumption as preferable to investing.
Thus, the investor is no worse off if the dividend is spent. Also, if the firm pays no
dividend, and the investor wants to consume $10, he/she can borrow at 10%.
This liability is offset by the additional $10 increase in firm value on the $10
additional retained earnings. Again, the investor is no worse off.
3.
Expected net income is also called accretion of discount because the firmโs
expected future cash flows are one year closer at year end than at the beginning.
Consequently, the opening firm value is rolled forward or โaccretedโ at the
discount rate used in the present value calculations.
4.
The procedure here is similar to that used in Question 2. Assume that the good
economy state is realized for year 1. Assume also that P.V. Ltd. pays a dividend
of, say, $40 at time 1. If the good economy state is also realized in year 2, P.V.โs
year 2 net income will then be:
P.V. Ltd.
Income Statement
For Year 2
(good economy in year 2)
Accretion of discount [(336.36 โ 40) ร.10]
29.64
Abnormal earnings, as a result of good state
realization in year 2 (200 โ 150)
50.00
Net income year 2
$79.64
PVโs balance sheet at the end of year 2 will then be:
P.V. Ltd.
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Balance Sheet
As at Time 2
Financial Asset
Shareholdersโ Equity
Cash (200 – 40 + 200 + 16)
$376.00
Opening balance
$336.36
Less: Dividend end
Capital Asset
0.00
of year 1
40.00
$296.36
Add: Net income
$376.00
79.64
$376.00
Thus, at time 2 shareholders have:
Cash from time 1 dividend
$40.00
Interest period 2 on time 1 dividend: $40 ร0.10
4.00
Value of firm per balance sheet, time 2
376.00
$420.00
Note: cash balance of $376 assumes no dividend paid for year 2.
If P.V. Ltd. paid no dividend at time 1, the value of the firm at time 2 would be:
Cash: 200 + 200 + 20
$420.00
Capital asset
0.00
$420.00
Thus, the shareholdersโ wealth is the same at time 2 whether the firm pays a year
1 dividend or not.
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
An identical analysis applies if the low state is realized in year 2. Shareholdersโ
wealth is $320 at time 2 regardless of whether P.V. Ltd. pays a dividend at time
1.
A similar analysis applies if the low state is realized in period 1.
Therefore, regardless of the state that is realized, shareholders are indifferent to
dividend policy. As long as ideal conditions hold, the introduction of uncertainty
does not invalidate dividend irrelevancy.
5.
Cash end
State realization Probability of year 1
Interest on opening
cash balance
Sales
year 2 Total
bad, bad
0.25
100
10
100
210
bad, good
0.25
100
10
200
310
good, bad
0.25
200
20
100
320
good, good
0.25
200
20
200
420
$1,260
Thus, the liquidating dividend will be $210, $310, $320, or $420; each with
probability 0.25. Thus, present value, at time 0, of expected liquidating dividend
is:
??0 =
=
1
[0.25(210 + 310 + 320 + 420)]
1.102
0.25
ร 1,260 = $260.33
1.10 2
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Expected cash flow in each year is 0.5 ร 100 + 0.5 ร 200 = 50 +100 = $150
Assuming no dividends, present value of future cash flows is thus:
??0 =
1
1
(150
(315) = $260.33,
+
15
+
150)
=
1.102
1.102
where $15 is the expected return on investing period 1 cash.
Note: it is assumed that state realizations in each period are independent.
6.
a.
The expected value of a single roll of a fair die is:
x=
b.
1
ร (1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6) = 3.5
6
First, you would have to write down a set of possible states of nature for
the die. One simple possibility would be to define:
State 1:
die is fair
State 2:
die is not fair.
Then, subjective probabilities of each state need to be assessed, based on any
prior information you have. For example, if the person supplying you with the die
looks suspicious, you might assess the probability of state 2 as 0.50, say.
A problem with this approach, however, is that to go on to calculate the expected
value of a single roll when the die is not fair, you do not have probabilities for
each possible outcome of the roll. That is, you do not know just how unfair the die
is.
A more elaborate alternative would be to formally recognize that the probability of
rolling a 1 can be anything from zero to one inclusive, and similarly for rolling a 2,
3, . . . , 6, subject to the requirement that the six probabilities sum to one.
Formally, we can regard a state as a 1 ร 6 vector
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P = [ p1, p2, . . . , p6],
subject to
pi โฅ 0
i = 1, 2, . . . , 6
โ pi = 1
Thus, the set of states consists of all vectors satisfying these requirements. All
vectors except the one with all pi = 1/6 represent a different possible bias.
Next, it is necessary to assess state probabilities. It is by no means obvious how
to do this. You would have to bring to bear any information or subjective feelings
that you may have. Lacking any objective information, one possibility is to
assume that each possible state is equally likely. Then, the expected value of a
single roll is 3.5.
This does not mean that you believe the die is fair, even though this is the same
answer as in part a. Rather, it means that the various possible biases cancel
each other out, since you feel that they are equally likely. Your uncertainty about
the true state of the die suggests that you would be interested in any information
that would help you refine your subjective probability assessment, which leads to
part c.
c.
It will never be known with certainty whether the die is fair or not because
luck might influence the outcome of the rolls. However, after a few rolls you
should be able to better predict future rolls. Yes, the four rolls should affect your
belief that the die is fair because you can calculate the average roll, which is 1/4
(6 + 4 + 1 + 3) = 3.5 here. Since this is exactly the average roll that would be
expected if the die was fair, you would probably increase your belief that it is fair.
Note: The main purpose of this question is to anticipate what happens when
objective state probabilities are not available, in preparation for the introduction of
decision making under uncertainty in Section 3.3. The analogy of this question is
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
to the problem of subjectively assessing probabilities over the true state of the
firm and of the role of financial statement information in refining these
probabilities. Questions 7, 8, and 9 of this chapter can usefully be assigned in
conjunction with this question. Alternatively, this question could be assigned as
part of Chapter 3.
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
7.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Under ideal conditions of certainty, future cash flows are known by assumption.
Thus estimates are not applicable.
Under ideal conditions of uncertainty, by assumption, there is a complete and
publicly known set of states of nature, known cash flows conditional on each
state, and objective probabilities of those states. Also, the interest rate to be used
for discounting is given. Then, expected present value is a simple calculation that
does not require estimates to prepare.
8.
Under non-ideal conditions, it may be difficult to write down a complete set of
states of nature and associated cash flows. Even if these can be written down,
difficulties remain because objective state probabilities are not available. This is
perhaps the most fundamental difficulty, since these probabilities must be
subjectively estimated. Also an interest rate is not necessarily given. All of these
difficulties lead to reliability problems of lack of representational faithfulness and
possible bias. The expected present value calculation can still be made, but it is
an estimate because the probabilities and other values that go into it are
estimates.
9.
Market value will be affected if the RRA information affects investorsโ subjective
probabilities of states of nature concerning future firm performance. This could
happen, for example, if the RRA statements show an increase or decrease in the
present values of proved reserves. This evidence, while highly relevant, suffers
from low reliability. Also, it is included in the financial statement notes, not in the
financial statements proper. Nevertheless, if the relevance of RRA outweighs its
low reliability, investors will increase or decrease their subjective probabilities
over states of nature. This would affect their evaluations of future earnings and/or
cash flows, their buy/sell decisions, hence the market value of the firm.
It can be argued that firm value will not be affected by pointing out that the RRA
information may be perceived by investors as so unreliable that they ignore it.
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10.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Relevant information is information that enables investors to estimate the present
value of future receipts from an asset (or payments under a liability). In an
accounting context, relevant information helps investors to predict future firm
performance, such as cash flows.
Reliable information is information that faithfully represents what it is supposed to
represent.
Note: In this book, we use the term relevance to refer to what the Conceptual
Framework now calls representational faithfulness. We do this because the term
is shorter and familiar from past usage. Instructors who wish to expose students
with the Framework terminology may wish to do so in this question. See Chapter
1, Note 14.
When conditions are not ideal, the estimation of the present value of future firm
cash flows (i.e., relevant information) requires specification of a set of possible
future cash flow amounts (i.e., states of nature). The probabilities of these states
are subjective, which means that they must be estimated by the preparer. Also,
an interest rate must be specified for the discounting calculations. All of these
procedures are subject to errors and possible bias, reducing reliability. Thus, like
almost all predictions of the future, relevant information tends to be unreliable.
Conversely, reliable information, such as the historical cost of a capital asset or
the face value of debt, tends to be low in relevance because this basis of
valuation involves no direct estimates of future receipts or payments. Rather, cost
is based on market transactions at the acquisition date. While, at time of
acquisition, historical costs generally reflect estimates of future receipts or
payments, they quickly lose relevance since market values, expected future
receipts, and interest rates change over time. Then, historical cost-based
valuations lose relevance.
Therefore, the accountant who tries to secure greater relevance by predicting
future events must cope with less reliability. Consequently, these two desirable
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
characteristics of accounting information must be traded off, since an increase in
one leads to a decrease in the other.
11.
Several reasons can be suggested why oil company managers have reservations
about RRA:
โข
The discount rate of 10% might not reflect the firmโs cost of capital.
โข
Low reliability. RRA involves making a large number of assumptions and
estimates. While RRA deals with low reliability in part by requiring average
prices of oil and gas for the period to be used (rather than prices
anticipated when the reserves are expected to be sold), management may
feel that average past prices bear little relationship to the net revenue the
company will receive in the future. Furthermore, management may be
concerned about low reliability of other estimates, such as reserve
quantities.
โข
Frequent changes in estimates. Conditions in the oil and gas market can
change rapidly, making it necessary for the firm to make frequent changes
in estimates.
โข
Investors may ignore. Investors may not understand the RRA information.
Even if they do, management may believe the RRA information is so
unreliable that investors will ignore it. If so, why prepare it?
โข
Legal liability. Management may be concerned that if the RRA estimates
are not realized, the firm will be subject to lawsuits from investors.
Managementโs reservations may be an attempt to limit or avoid liability.
12.
a.
Most industrial and retail firms regard revenue as earned at the point of
sale. Since sale implies a contract with the buyer and change of ownership, this
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
is usually the earliest point at which significant risks and rewards of ownership
pass to the buyer, the seller loses control of the items sold (e.g.., title passes to
buyer) and at which the amount of revenue to be received can be determined
with reasonable reliability.
b.
Under RRA, revenue is recognized when oil and gas reserves are proven.
This point in the operating cycle does not meet the IAS 18 criteria for revenue
recognition. Since the oil and gas are still in the ground and the reserves are not
sold, the significant risks and rewards of ownership have not been passed on and
control remains with the producer. Also, the large number of revisions to
estimates under RRA casts doubt on the reliability of the amount of revenue
recognized. Presumably, this is why RRA is presented as supplementary
information only. Presumably, however, collection is reasonably assured since oil
and gas have ready markets.
Note: This question illustrates that the trade-off between relevance and reliability
can be equivalently framed in terms of revenue recognition as well as balance
sheet valuation. In effect, balance sheet valuation is in terms of the debit side of
asset valuation whereas criteria for revenue recognition are in terms of the credit
side. The basic trade-off is the same, however. In particular, it should be noted
that early revenue recognition increases relevance, even though it may lose
reliability.
13.
a.
From a balance sheet perspective under ideal conditions, inventory is
valued at current value. This could be the present value of expected future cash
receipts from sale, that is, value-in-use. Alternatively, inventory could be valued
at market value, that is, at fair value since under ideal conditions these 2 values
would be the same).
Note: In the present value examples of this chapter, all production is assumed
sold for cash. If all production is not sold, inventory would be valued at current
value, and cash would be less by this amount.
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Since the firmโs balance sheet includes inventory at current value, it is included at
current value in the accretion of discount calculation. Thus, in effect, revenue on
unsold production is recognized as the inventory is manufactured.
b.
Cost basis accounting for inventory is due to lack of ideal conditions.
Then, current value requires estimation, opening up inventory valuation to error
and possible manager bias. Accountants must feel that this reduction in reliability
outweighs the greater relevance of current inventory value.
Historical cost accounting for inventories is not completely reliable, since firm
managers still have some room to manage (i.e., bias) their reported profitability
through their choice of cost methods (FIFO, LIFO, etc.). Furthermore, even the
cost of inventories is not always reliable. For example, overhead costs are
usually allocated to the cost of manufactured inventory. These costs are affected
by manager decisions about allocation rates and production volumes.
Note: it could also be mentioned that historical cost accounting for inventories is
accompanied by the lower-of-cost-or-market rule. Then, reliability issues of
estimating current valuation re-arise. Also, it is possible that the firm may attempt
to hide obsolescence by not writing down obsolete inventory at all.
14.
This practice implies that revenue is recognized as cash is collected. This basis
of valuation might be used if the firm sells with little or no money down and a long
collection period. Valuation of accounts receivable at the amount of the sale
would require estimating credit losses. This estimate may be too unreliable under
these conditions, outweighing the greater relevance of recognizing revenue as a
sale is made.
15.
a.
Present value of capital asset 2015, 2016, and 2017
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
PA0 =
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
600
600
600
+
+
= 566.04 + 534.00 + 503.77 = $1,603.81
2
1.06 1.06 1.06 3
PA1 = 566.04 + 534.00 = $1,100.04
PA2 = $566.04
Sure Corp.
Balance Sheet
As at December 31, 2015
Cash (600 โ 50)
$550.00
Shareholdersโ equity
Capital asset, at
present value
Capital stock
$1,100.04
$1,603.81
Retained Earnings
Net income 96.23
Dividend
(50.00)
$1,650.04
46.23
$1,650.04
Sure Corp.
Income Statement
For the year ended December 31, 2015
Accretion of discount (1,603.81 ร .06)
b.
$96.23
Sure Corp.
Balance Sheet
As at December 31, 2016
Cash (550 + 600 + 33 โ 50)
$1,133.00
Shareholdersโ equity
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Capital asset, at
Capital stock
present value
566.04
$1,603.81
Retained earnings
$1,699.04
95.23
$1,699.04
Note: Cash includes $550 ร .06 = $33 interest on opening cash balance.
Retained earnings calculated as $46.23 + 99.00 โ 50 = $95.23
Sure Corp.
Income Statement
For the year ended December 31, 2016
Accretion of discount (1,650.04 ร .06)
c.
$99.00
Under ideal conditions, present value and market value are equal. This is
because of arbitrage.
Under real conditions, market values provide only a partial implementation of
fair value accounting. If reliable market values are available, fair values based on
market prices provide a useful trade-off between relevance and reliability.
However, because of incomplete markets, market values are not available for all
assets and liabilities. Then, estimates of fair value, such as the market value of
related assets and liabilities, reversion to value-in-use, or models, are needed.
These problems complicate the implementation of fair value accounting due to
possible low reliability.
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d.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
The main reason for low reliability is the difficulty of estimating expected
future cash flows, which would require a set of possible future cash flows (states
of nature) and subjective probabilities of these states. Since, under realistic
conditions these estimates are subject to error and possible manager bias,
reliability is reduced.
Another reason arises from possible error and bias in the choice of interest rate
for discounting. However, the prime bank rate and central bank rate are available
as proxies.
Low reliability does not necessarily mean that present value-based accounting is
not decision useful, since present values are high in relevance. These two
desirable characteristics of accounting information must be traded off. If the
benefit of higher reliability exceeds the danger of lower reliability, present value
accounting is decision useful.
16.
a.
P Ltd.
Balance Sheet
As at End of First Year
Financial Asset
Liabilities
Cash (note 1)
$1,137.40
Capital Asset, at
Bonds outstanding (note 3) $616.00
Shareholdersโ Equity
present value (note 2)
2,200.00
Capital stock issued (note 4)
2,474.00
Net income (note 5)
247.40
$3,337.40
Notes:
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2,721.40
$3,337.40
Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
1.
Cash = $1,210.00 cash flow – 72.60 (605 ร 0.12) interest paid on
bonds = $1,137.40
2.
Book value of asset = PV end of year 1 = (2,000 + 420)/1.10 =
$2,200
3.
Bonds outstanding = PV at end of year 1 = (72.60 int. yr. 2 +
principal due of 605)/1.10 = $616
4.
Capital stock is issued in the amount of cost of asset less proceeds
of bonds:
3,100 โ [
72.60 72.60 + 605
+
]
1.10
1.10 2
= 3,100 โ (66 + 560)
= 3,100 โ 626
= $2,474
5.
Net income for year 1 calculated as $2,474 ร .10 = $247.40
Note: Purchase price of capital asset can be verified as:
1,210/1.10 + 2,000/(1.10)2 + 420/(1.10)2 = $3,100
Note: An alternative net income solution, equally acceptable, is:
Accretion of discount $3100 ร 0.10 = $310.00
Less interest accrued on opening
present value of bonds $626 ร 0.10 = 62.60
Net Income
$247.40
In this case, discount is accrued on the opening value of the capital asset,
with a deduction for interest accrued on the debt.
b.
Ideal conditions are unlikely to hold because:
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It is unlikely that future cash flows from the fixed asset can be
accurately forecast.
โข
It is unlikely that there is a single interest rate in the economy, and
interest rates may change over time.
c.
If ideal conditions do not hold, expected income is likely to be different
than the amount calculated in part a of $247.40. When ideal conditions do not
hold it is likely that the amounts and/or timing of expected future cash flows will
change over the year. This gives rise to changes in estimates (i.e., abnormal
earnings), which will be reflected in net income for the year.
Another reason why net income may change from expected is that interest rates
may change, which would also change the present value of future cash flows.
The resulting change in present value will be reflected in net income for the year.
17.
a.
Expected present value of North Ltdโs asset on August 1, 2015 and July
31, 2016:
๏ฃฎ 900 900 ๏ฃน
๏ฃฎ 300 300 ๏ฃน
PA0 = 0.7 ๏ฃฏ
+
+ 0.3๏ฃฏ
+
2๏ฃบ
2
๏ฃฐ1.03 1.03 ๏ฃป
๏ฃฐ1.03 1.03 ๏ฃบ๏ฃป
= 0.7(873.79 + 848.34 ) + 0.3(291.26 + 282.78)
= 0.7 ร 1722.13 + 0.3 ร 574.04
= 1,205.49 + 172.21
= 1,377.70
900
300
+ 0.3 ร
1.03
1.03
= 0.7 ร 873.79 + 0.3 ร 291.26
= 611.65 + 87.38
= 699.03
PA1 = 0.7 ร
North Ltd.
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Balance sheet
As at July 31, 2016
Cash (900 โ 15 – 50)
$835.00
Bank loan
$500.00
Shareholdersโ equity
Capital asset, at
Capital stock (PA1)
present value
699.03
877.70
Retained earnings
(206.33 โ 50)
156.33 1,034.03
$1,534.03
$1,534.03
North Ltd.
Income Statement
For the year ended July 31, 2016
Expected net income (accretion of discount) (877.70 ร .03)
$26.33
Abnormal earnings:
Expected cash flow (0.7 ร 900) + (0.3 ร 300) = (630 + 90) = $720.00
Actual cash flow
900.00 180.00
Net income for the year
Note: An alternate solution, equally acceptable, is:
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$206.33
Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Accretion of discount $1,377.70 ร 0.03 =
$41.33
Less interest accrued on bank loan $500 ร 0.03 = 15.00
26.33
b.
Abnormal earnings, as above
180.00
Net income
$206.33
The implied revenue recognition timing is on a present value basis. That is,
discounted expected future revenue is capitalized into capital asset on the
balance sheet. Income for the period is thus interest on the opening capitalized
balance plus or minus the difference between expected and actual cash flow for
the period
Note: An alternative answer, equally acceptable, is that revenue is recognized as
changes in current value occur. Here, the current value of operating cash
increased by ($900 โ 15 =) $885 during the year, and the current value of
equipment decreased by (1,377.70 โ 699.03 =) $678.67, giving net income of
$206.33.
c.
Net income for the year ended July 31, 2016 on a historical cost basis:
Sales (900) minus amortization expense (1,377.70/2 = 688.85) gives net
income of $211.15 for the year ended July 31, 2016.
The present value-based income statement is more relevant, since it is based on
the present value of future cash flows. However, the historical cost-based income
statement is more reliable, since, in the absence of ideal conditions, the present
value-based statement requires estimates of future cash flows, probabilities, and
the interest rate. When ideal conditions do not hold, these estimates are subject
to error and possible manager bias.
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18.
a.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Under ideal conditions, the amount paid for an asset equals its expected
present value.
Expected present value of Electroโs assets on January 1, 2015:
๏ฃฎ 900 1200 ๏ฃน
๏ฃฎ 600 600 ๏ฃน
PA0 = 0.6 ๏ฃฏ
+
+ 0.4 ๏ฃฏ
+
2๏ฃบ
2
๏ฃฐ1.03 1.03 ๏ฃป
๏ฃฐ1.03 1.03 ๏ฃบ๏ฃป
= 0.6(873.79 + 1131.12 ) + 0.4(582.52 + 565.56 )
= 0.6 ร 2004.91 + 0.4 ร 1148.08
= 1202.94 + 459.23
= 1662.17
Present value of assets on Jan. 1, 2016 also required to answer part b:
1200
600
+ 0.4 ร
1.03
1.03
= 0.6 ร 1165.05 + 0.4 ร 582.52
= 699.03 + 233.01
= 932.04
PA1 = 0.6 ร
b.
Electro Ltd.
Balance Sheet
As at December 31, 2015
Cash (900 โ 60)
$840.00
Capital asset, at
present value
Shareholdersโ equity
Capital stock (PA0)
$1,662.17
932.04
Retained earnings (169.87 โ 60) 109.87
$1,772.04
$1,772.04
Electro Ltd.
Income Statement
For the year ended December 31, 2015
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Expected net income (accretion of discount) (1,662.17 ร .03)
$49.87
Abnormal earnings
Expected cash flow (0.6 ร 900) + (0.4 ร 600) = (540 + 240) $780.00
Actual cash flow
900.00 120.00
Net income for the year
c.
$169.87
The main reason is that ideal conditions do not prevail in practice. The
high relevance of present value-based accounting remains. However, lack of
ideal conditions creates concern about reliability of present value-based
amortization, since estimates of future cash flows are subject to error and
possible managerial bias. Furthermore, attempts to use market values (i.e., fair
values) in place of present values run into market incompleteness. It seems that,
for much property, plant and equipment, increased relevance of current values is
outweighed by decreased reliability.
In addition, present values and/or fair values of property, plant, and equipment
are volatile, since future cash flows and market values are usually highly
dependent on the state of the economy. This creates volatility of net income.
Managers dislike high net income volatility, particularly if they believe that the
volatility does not reflect their performance in managing the company.
19.
a.
Under ideal conditions, the amount paid for an asset equals its present
value:
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50
100
200
100
)
) + 0.4(
+
+
2
1.06 1.06 2
1.06 1.06
= 0.6(94.34 + 178.00) + 0.4(94.34 + 44.50)
= 0.6 ร 272.34 + 0.4 ร 138.88
= 163.40 + 55.55
= 218.95
PA0 = 0.6(
b.
QC Ltd.
Statement of Net Income
For the Year ended December 31, 2016
Accretion of discount (232.08 ร.06)
$13.92
Abnormal earnings
Expected cash flow (0.6 ร 200 + 0.4 ร 50)
140.00
Actual cash flow (high state)
200.00
Net income for the year
60.00
$73.92
Note: Calculation of accretion of discount requires QC Ltd. net worth as at end of 2010:
Capital stock (= cost of capital asset)
$218.95
Net income 2010 (218.95 ร .06)
13.13
Net worth, December 31, 2010
$232.08
Alternative calculation:
Cash
$100.00
Present value of capital asset
0.6(200/1.06) + 0.4(50/1.06)
= 113.21 + 18.87 =
132.08
$232.08
c.
QC Ltd.
Balance Sheet
As at December 31, 2016
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Current asset
Capital stock
Cash (100 + 200 + 6)
Capital asset, at
present value
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
$306.00
$218.95
Retained earnings
0.00
Net income, 2015 13.13
Net income, 2016 73.92 87.05
$306.00
$306.00
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20.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Note: In this problem, state probabilities are not independent over time. Part b of
this question requires calculations not illustrated in the text.
a.
The cost of the machine equals its present value as at time zero:
PV0 =
1
(0.75 ร 1,000 + 0.25 ร 3,000)
1.08
1
[0.25(0.60 ร 1,000 + 0.40 ร 3,000) + 0.75(0.10 ร 1,000 + 0.90 ร 3,000)]
+
1.08 2
=
1
(750 + 750) + 1 2 [0.25(600 + 1,200) + 0.75(100 + 2,700)]
1.08
1.08
=
1
1
(0.25 ร 1,800 + 0.75 ร 2,800)
ร 1,500 +
1.08 2
1.08
= 1,388.89 +
1
(450 + 2,100)
1.08 2
= 1,388.89 + 2,186.21
= $3,575.10
1
(0.6 ร 1,000 + 0.4 ร 3,000)
1.08
1
=
(600 + 1,200)
1.08
1,800
=
= $1,666.67
1.08
PV1 =
b.
Conditional Ltd.
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Income Statement for Year 1
(No major failure)
Accretion of discount (expected net income)
(3,575.10 ร .08 = $286.01)
$286.01
Abnormal earnings
Year 1:
Expected cash flows (0.75 ร 1,000 + 0.25 ร 3,000) 1,500.00
Actual cash flows
3,000.00
1,500.00
Year 2:
Original expected cash flows:
(0.75 ร 2,800 + 0.25 ร 1,800)
2,550.00
Revised expected cash flows resulting from
year 1 state realization:
(0.60 ร 1,000 + 0.40 ร 3,000)
1,800.00
Reduction in year 2 expected cash flows
750.00
Present value of reduction: (750/1.08)
(694.44)
Net Income
$1,091.57
c.
Conditional Ltd.
Balance Sheet as at End of Year 1
(No major failure)
Financial Asset
Cash
Shareholdersโ Equity
$3,000.00
Capital Asset,
Capital Stock
Retained Earnings
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$3,575.10
Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
at present value
1,666.67
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Net income
for the year
$4,666.67
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1,091.57
$4,666.67
Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
20.
a.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Present value at January 1, 2015:
7,000 6,000 5,000
+
+
1.10 1.10 2 1.10 3
= $15,078.89
Present value at December 31, 2015, based on revised estimates:
6,500 6,000
+
1.10 1.10 2
= $10,867.77
ABC Ltd.
Income Statement from
Proved Oil and Gas Reserves
For the Year Ended December 31, 2015
Accretion of discount (15,078.89 ร 0.10)
$1,507.89
Changes in estimates:
Shortfall in 2011 revenue
(7,000 – 6,500)
($500.00)
Increase in present value
of future revenue
1,280.99
780.99
$2,288.88
Increase in present value of future revenue is calculated as follows:
Revised present value at December 31, 2015
$10,867.77
Original present value at December 31, 2015
6,000 5,000
=
+
1.10 1.10 2
9,586.78
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Increase in present value of future revenues
$1,280.99
Note: While not required as part of the question, ABCโs balance sheet as at
December 31, 2015, is:
Cash
$6,500.00
Capital stock
Oil well, at P.V.
10,867.77
Retained earnings
$17,367.77
b.
$15,078.89
2,288.88
$17.367.77
Possible concerns arise from the low reliability of reserves estimates, and
include:
โข
Reserve quantity estimates are subject to error.
โข
The timing of extraction may differ from estimate.
โข
Changes in price and cost estimates. Due to the number of assumptions
about oil prices and costs in the present value calculations, the estimated
future cash flow amounts might not reflect the amount of net revenue the
firm will actually receive in future periods.
โข
Lawsuits. The expected future cash flows may not represent fair market
value of reserves. Management may fear this will mislead investors,
possibly leading to lawsuits.
22.
a.
HL Oil & Gas Ltd.
Income Statement from Proved Oil and Gas Reserves
For the Year 2015
Accretion of discount
$700
Abnormal Earnings:
Present value of additional reserves added during the year
Unexpected items:
Changes in prices
1,200
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1,500
Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
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Changes in quantities
(200)
1,000
Net income for the year
b.
$3,200
The reason derives from concerns about reliability of the reserves
estimates. The standard setters must have believed that while unproved reserves
information is highly relevant, they could not be valued with sufficient reliability
that the resulting estimates were decision useful.
c.
Again, the reason derives from reliability concerns. Allowing each firm to
choose its own discount rate opens up the possibility of manager bias, whereby
the rate is chosen to achieve a desired present value.
A disadvantage is that when conditions are not ideal, different firms may have
different costs of capital. This can arise, for example, from operating in different
countries and in different geographical conditions. Then, mandated discount rates
may not reflect the reservesโ riskiness. This would reduce decision usefulness.
23.
a.
FX Energy, Inc.
Income Statement for 2015
Expected net incomeโaccretion of discount
$546
Abnormal earnings:
Present value of additional reserves proved
during the year
2,511
Unexpected items-changes in estimates
Net changes in prices and production costs
(159)
Changes in estimated future development
costs
(53)
Revisions in previous quantity estimates
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Changes in rates of production and other
116
Net income from proved oil and gas reserves
b.
(127) 2,384
$2,930
RRA net income of $2,930 differs from the historical cost-based loss of
$5,245 because of differences in the timing of revenue recognition. Under
historical cost accounting, revenue is recognized when the reserves are lifted and
sold. Under RRA, revenue is recognized as reserves are proved. Then, RRA net
income consists of accretion of discount on the opening present value of proved
reserves, adjusted for abnormal earnings (i.e., corrections of opening present
value). For FX Energy, Inc., the main reason for the large abnormal earnings is
the proving of $2,511 of additional reserves during the year. Under historical cost
accounting, this amount is not yet recognized as revenue.
c.
The reason derives from concerns about reliability of the reserves
estimates. Information about all reserves, and their expected future cash flows,
would be highly relevant. However, the designers of the RRA standard must have
felt that the low reliability of unproved reserves valuations would outweigh the
increased relevance. That is, unproved reserve quantities are subject to even
greater reliability concerns than proved reserves. and thus are unlikely to be
decision useful.
d.
Again, the reason derives from reliability concerns. Allowing each firm to
choose its own discount rate opens up the possibility of manager bias, whereby
the rate is chosen to achieve a desired present value.
A disadvantage is that when conditions are not ideal, different firms may have
different costs of capital. This can arise, for example, from operating in different
countries and in different geographical conditions. Then, relevance is decreased
since the reservesโ present value at 10% will not reflect the riskiness, hence the
required rate of return, of those reserves.
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24.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
a.
Moonglo Energy Inc.
Income Statement for Proved Oil and Gas Operations
For year 2015
RRA Basis
Accretion of discount
$125
Present value of additional reserves added during year
162
Unexpected items: Changes in previous yearโs estimates
134
Net income from proved reserves for the year
$421
Note: Items on the statement of changes in proved reserves not included in the
income statement above ((456), (4), 629) represent cash receipts and
disbursements during the year, whereas the items on the income statement
above represent non-cash changes. An income statement based on cash
receipts and disbursements less amortization expense yields the same result:
Sales (456 + 4)
$460
Development costs incurred in year
(629)
Amortization โincomeโ โ increase in
balance of proved reserves in
year (1,660 โ 1070)
590
Net income
$421
See Notes 8 and 11 of this chapter.
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b.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Profit on a historical cost basis differs from RRA net income because of
different bases of revenue recognition. Under RRA, income is recognized as
reserves are proved. Under historical cost, income is recognized as sales are
made. Since proving of reserves precedes sales, the two income measures will
differ. Here, since the standardized measure increased for the year (i.e., an
increase in proved reserves), RRA net income exceeds historical cost net
income. Under historical cost, increases in the value of reserves are not
recognized until the reserves are sold.
c.
RRA is more relevant, since it records revenue earlier than historical cost.
In effect, revenue is recognized as reserves are proved, rather than when sold as
under historical cost. This gives the financial statement user an earlier reading of
future firm performance.
If a balance sheet was prepared on an RRA basis, inventory of proved oil and
gas reserves would be valued at average selling prices for the year, rather than
at historical cost. Again, this is more relevant since selling price of inventory gives
a better measure of future firm performance than historical cost, assuming
reasonable reliability.
Note: Relevance would be even greater if proved reserves were valued at
expected selling prices, as would be the case under ideal conditions.
RRA is less reliable than historical cost both because of possible errors in
estimating amounts of reserves and their production and development costs, and
possible manager bias. Under RRA, changes are often quite material. Here,
changes to previous estimates ($134), which could possibly be due to errors or
bias in earlier estimates, exceed expected net income for the year ($125).
Note: Changes in estimates which do not result from error or bias introduce
volatility into present values, but are not themselves a source of unreliability.
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From the information available, we do not know the reasons for the estimate
changes.
25.
a.
The most relevant point of revenue recognition is at the beginning of the
operating cycle. For a manufacturing firm, this would be as raw materials and
other components of manufacturing cost are acquired and production begins. For
an oil and gas firm, this would be as reserves are discovered. For a retail firm,
this would be as merchandise is acquired. For a firm with long-term contracts,
this would be when the contract is signed.
Indeed, one could envisage revenue recognition even earlier than this. For
example, for a manufacturing firm, revenue could be recognized when acquisition
of manufacturing capacity begins, consistent with accounting under ideal
conditions. For an oil and gas firm, revenue could be recognized as reserves are
estimated based on geological data.
The most reliable point of revenue recognition is as cash is collected from sales
and services.
b.
Points to consider:
โข
Lucent has an incentive to recognize 2000 revenue early to try to prevent
its reported net income from falling below 1998 and 1999 levels.
โข
The earlier revenue is recognized, the greater the relevance.
โข
Early revenue recognition sacrifices reliability, since amounts and timing of
cash collections become more difficult to predict.
โข
It is questionable whether the significant risks of ownership have not been
transferred to the buyer with respect to merchandise shipped to
distribution partners. Similar questions arise concerning whether Lucent
has lost control of the items, revenues can be measured reliably, and
whether collection is reasonably assured.
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Revenue recognition on partial shipments may violate the conventional
point of sale criterion. However, if these shipments are part of a long-term
contract, revenue recognized as goods are shipped may be consistent
with the criterion of revenue recognition as the work progresses.
โข
Lucentโs treatment of vendor financing appears to contradict the criteria.
While, technically, products may have been sold, credits granted to assist
the customer to finance purchases increase credit risk, reducing
assurance about the amounts that will ultimately be collected.
A reasonable conclusion is that Lucent has been overly aggressive in recognition
of revenue. The necessity to restate 2000 revenue suggests that the significant
risks and rewards of ownership had not been transferred to the buyer and that
control of items shipped had not been relinquished.
c.
Ownership interest in the customer increases problems of reliable
estimation of the amounts that will ultimately be collected. The vendorโs revenue
will be biased upwards and the likelihood of collection reduced if it uses its
influence to force goods and services on the customer beyond the point where
the customer can sell and pay for the goods and services in the normal course of
business. This appears to have happened in the case of Lucent in 2000.
26.
a.
Relevant information is information that enables the prediction of future
firm performance, such as future cash flows. Early revenue recognition
anticipates these future cash flows, hence it is relevant. Thus, Qwestโs revenue
recognition policy provided relevant information.
b.
Reliable information is information that faithfully represents the firmโs
financial position and results of operations. When significant risks and rewards of
ownership are transferred to the buyer and the seller loses control over the items
transferred, the amount of future cash flows is determined with reasonable
representational faithfulness and verifiability, since the purchaser has an
obligation to pay. Also, if the amount of cash to be received is determined in an
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arms-length transaction, the amount of sale is reliable due to lack of possible
manager bias.
It seems that Qwestโs revenue recognition policy met none of these reliability
criteria. The future cash flows were not representationally faithful since there
appeared to be no provision for returns, obsolescence, or unforeseen service
costs. Furthermore, as evidenced by the later SEC settlements, substantial
manager bias is apparent. Obviously, amounts ultimately collectible were not
reasonably assured, since the SEC concluded that Qwest had inflated its
revenues.
c.
Under ideal conditions, revenue is recognized as production capacity is
acquired, since future revenues, or expected revenues, are inputs into the
present value calculations. The balance sheet valuations of capital assets
incorporate these revenue projections. For an oil and gas company, revenue
recognition is analogousโrevenue is recognized as reserves are discovered or
purchased.
The reason for recognizing revenue early is that under ideal conditions, future
cash flows, or expected future cash flows, are perfectly reliable, being based on
publicly known sets of states of nature and objective state probabilities. There is
thus no sacrifice of usefulness in recognizing revenue as early as possible.
Note: A superior answer will point out that under ideal conditions net income
consists of interest on opening present value (i.e., accretion of discount), plus or
minus abnormal earnings under ideal conditions of uncertainty). These are not
operating revenues, however, but simply an effect of the passing of time.
27.
a.
Manulife Financial Corporation
Income Statement, Embedded Value Basis
Year Ended December 31, 2011
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Accretion of discount
$2,808
Abnormal earnings
New business during the year
1,086
Unexpected items-changes in estimates
Experience variances, etc.
(5,041)
Discount rate changes
(2,416)
Changes in exchange rates
1,171 (6,286)
Net loss for the year
b.
($2,392)
The most likely reason is low reliability of the embedded value. Without an
audit to check the calculations, embedded value is subject to calculation error
and possible bias due to manager manipulation. Consequently, investors
perceive less information asymmetry only when the value is audited.
A related reason is that firms belonging to CFO Forum, which supports
transparent reporting, are perceived by investors as committed to voluntarily
reporting embedded value and, presumably, committed to its reliable reporting
regardless of whether the news is good or bad. Without such commitment,
investors may fear that management would discontinue reporting embedded
value should it contain bad news. Thus membership in CFO Forum reinforces the
effect of the audit.
c.
One reason for the difference follows from the arguments in b. Since it
appears that Manulife neither has its embedded value audited nor belongs to
CFO Forum, investors may ignore the embedded value per share.
Another reason is that investors may be concerned about the substantial 2011
reduction in new business from $1,841 in 2010 to $1,086. Since embedded value
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does not include expected new business in future years, investors may be
concerned that the 2011 new business reduction will continue.
Also, the loss of $2,416 from changes in discount rates indicates that Manulife
raised the rate it uses to discount future receipts from its business in place. This
may be interpreted by investors that Manulife has become more risky. To the
extent that investors are collectively risk-averse, this will lower the value they
place on Manulife shares.
Note: Other possible reasons, which anticipate text topics not yet covered,
include:
โข
Investors may be concerned about the reduction in embedded value for
the year of (39,303 โ 36,065) $3,238, without realizing that this reduction
includes dividends of $846. Net loss in part a of $2,392 is somewhat less
pessimistic.
โข
Investors may not realize that some of the embedded value items may not
persist, such as the unfavourable experience variances of $5,041.
โข
General economic conditions may be poor, leading to investor pessimism
and low stock prices for all firms.
28.
a.
The National Instrument 51-101 disclosures are more relevant than those
of RRA. Reasons include:
โข
Information about probable reserves is given in addition to information
about proved reserves.
โข
Future revenues are evaluated using forecasted prices as well as year-end
prices. RRA uses only average oil and gas prices for the period.
โข
Unlike RRA, future net revenues are discounted at several different
interest rates. This allows the investor to choose that rate closest to his/her
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estimate of the firmโs cost of capital. This rate could vary, for example, due
to location of reserves or current interest rates in the economy.
b.
Points to consider:
โข
A reasonably precise definition of proved reserves and unproved reserves.
This adds to representational faithfulness.
โข
Reserves information must be verified by a qualified independent
professional and reviewed by the Board of Directors. This adds to
representational faithfulness.
โข
Use of forecasted prices reduces reliability to the extent that forecasted
prices are more subject to errors of estimation and possible bias than year
end or average period prices. Note, however, that volatility of prices per se
is not a source of unreliability. Thus, assuming no valuation errors or
biases, changes in reserves values as forecasted prices change capture
the real volatility faced by the firm. Real volatility should not be hidden
since this is information that investors may find useful.
โข
To the extent that estimation of unproved reserves is more subject to error
and possible bias than for proved reserves, reliability of total proved plus
probable reserves is lowered. Disclosure of only proved reserves avoids
this source of unreliability.
c.
Reasons for the disclaimer:
โข
Companies may be concerned about the reliability of their estimates, and
wish to alert investors to this possibility.
โข
Companies may be concerned that if future revenues differ from those
forecasted, they may be subject to lawsuits. Disclaimers should help
defend against such suits.
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โข
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Managers may be concerned that their reputations will be adversely
affected if future revenues differ from forecast. Disclaimers should help
protect their reputations.
29.
a.
A theoretically correct measure of income is the net income of a firm for a
period calculated on a present value basis; that is, accretion of discount on
opening firm present value, plus or minus any differences between expected and
actual cash flows for the period.
Alternatively, net income is theoretically correct if it is calculated so as to include
the changes during the period in the market values of all assets and liabilities,
adjusted for capital transactions (providing that the markets for all assets and
liabilities exist and work reasonably well).
b.
A theoretically correct measure of income does not exist because ideal
conditions do not exist. As a result, future cash inflows and outflows from assets
and liabilities cannot be reliably estimated. This means that present value-based
net income is not theoretically correct since theoretical correctness requires
complete reliability.
Furthermore, market incompleteness can exist in the absence of ideal conditions.
Then, properly working market values for all assets and liabilities of a firm need
not exist. As a result, net income based on net changes in market values is not
theoretically correct either.
c.
Historical cost accounting is reasonably reliable because the cost of an
asset is usually an objective and verifiable number. However, while cost is also
relevant at time of acquisition, it may lose relevance over time due to changes in
market prices, interest rates and economic conditions, which will change the
assetโs current value. To the extent reasonably-working market prices exist,
current value accounting is more relevant than historical cost while retaining
reliability. However, if such market values do not exist, current valuation requires
estimates of fair value, cash flow estimates, or the use of models. Estimates of
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Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
cash flows face serious problems of reliability, as do the inputs into valuation
models.
Similar considerations apply to liabilities. If a reasonably-working market value
exists for a liability (e.g., long term debt, certain derivative financial instruments),
fair value provides both a relevant and reliable current valuation. If historical cost
accounting ignores such value, it sacrifices relevance with little or no increase in
reliability. However, if current value of a liability must be estimated on the basis of
future cash outflows or by use of models, similar trade-offs as for assets exist.
For example, the carrying value of long term debt is not necessarily adjusted for
changes in interest rates or for changes in the credit standing of the issuer. Such
changes are highly relevant to investors, but are subject to reliability concerns to
the extent that a well-working market value does not exist (e.g., the debt may not
be traded). Also, substantial reliability issues exist for current values of other
liabilities, such as leases and post-retirement benefits, which do not typically
have market values.
Overall, we may conclude that historical cost accounting sacrifices considerable
relevance in order to attain reasonable reliability.
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Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Additional Problems
2A-1.
Note: In this problem, state probabilities are not independent over time.
XYZ Ltd. purchased an asset on January 1, 2005 with a useful life of two years,
at the end of which time it has no residual value. The cash flows from the asset
are uncertain. If the economy turns out to be โnormal,โ the asset will generate
$4,000 in cash flow each year; if the economy is โbad,โ it will generate $3,000 in
cash flow per year; and if the economy is โgood,โ the cash flow generated will be
$5,000 per year. Cash flows are received at year-end. In each year, the chances
of a โnormalโ economy being realized are 30%, the chances of a โbadโ economy
are 50%, and the chances of a โgoodโ economy are 20%. State realization for
both years becomes publicly known at the end of 2005, that is, if the normal state
happens for year 1, it will also happen for year 2, etc.
Assumptions
โข
Ideal conditions hold under uncertainty.
โข
The economy-wide interest rate is 10%.
โข
XYZ Ltd. finances the asset purchase partly by a bond issue and partly by
a common share issue. The bond has a $3,000 face value and a 10%
coupon rate and matures on December 31, 2001.
โข
XYZ Ltd. has adopted the policy of paying out 50% of its net income as
dividends to its shareholders.
โข
The economy turns out to be โgood.โ
Required
a.
Calculate the present values of the asset at January 1, 2005, and
December 31, 2005.
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b.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Prepare the present value-based income statement of XYZ Ltd. for the
year ended December 31, 2005.
c.
Prepare the present value-based balance sheet of XYZ Ltd. as at
December 31, 2005.
d.
Explain why, even under uncertainty, present value-based financial
statements are both relevant and reliable provided ideal conditions hold.
e.
Explain why shareholders of XYZ Ltd. are indifferent to whether they
receive any dividend from the company.
2A-2. Relevant Ltd. operates under ideal conditions of uncertainty. Its operations are
highly dependent on the weather. For any given year, the probabilities are 0.3
that the weather will be bad and 0.7 that it will be good. These state probabilities
are independent over time. That is, the state probabilities for a given year are not
affected by the actual weather in previous years.
Relevant Ltd. produces a single product for which the demand will fall to zero at
the end of 2 years. It produces this product using specialized machinery, which
will have no value at the end of 2 years. The machinery was purchased on 1
January, 2005. It was financed in part by means of a bank loan of $2,000
repayable at the end of 2006, with the balance financed by capital stock. No
dividends will be paid until the end 2006. Interest on the bank loan is payable at
the end of each year. The interest rate in the economy is 6%.
Cash flows are not received until the end of each year. Amounts of cash flows for
each year are given in the following payoff table:
State
Probability
Cash Flow
Cash Flow
Year 1
Year 2
Bad weather
0.3
$600
$400
Good weather
0.7
$6000
$3000
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State realization for 2005 is good weather.
Required
a.
Prepare, in good form, a balance sheet for Relevant Ltd. as at the end of
2005 and an income statement for 2005.
b.
As at January 1, 2006, how much is expected net income for 2006?
c.
Explain why the financial statements you have prepared in part a are both
completely relevant and completely reliable.
2A-3. An area where discounting could possibly be applied is for future income tax
liability resulting from timing differences. Consider a firm that purchases an asset
costing $100,000 on January 1 of year 1. It is amortized on a straight-line basis at
20% per year on the firmโs books. Tax amortization is 40% on a declining balance basis. The income tax rate is 45%.
The following schedule shows a simplified calculation of the income tax liability balance
for this asset over its life, assuming zero salvage value. This is the firmโs only capital
asset.
StraightOpening
Tax
Line
Year Tax B.V.
Additions
Amortization
Amortization
Difference
1
โ
$100,000
$40,000
$20,000
$20,000
2
60,000
24,000
20,000
4,000
3
36,000
14,400
20,000
(5,600)
4
21,600
8,640
20,000
(11,360)
5
12,960
12,960*
20,000
(7,040)
Tax on
Income Tax
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Year Difference
Liability
1
9,000
9,000
2
1,800
10,800
3
(2,520)
8,280
4
(5,112)
3,168
5
(3,168)
0
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
*It is assumed that all of the remaining tax book value is claimed in year 5.
Required
a.
Calculate the discounted present value of the future income tax liability at
the end of each of years 1 to 5. Use a discount rate of 12%.
b.
Why are the balances calculated in part a different from the undiscounted
income tax liabilities?
c.
What problems would there be if the discounting approach was applied to
the tax liability of a large, growing firm with many capital assets?
2A-4. On January 1, 2005, GAZ Ltd. purchased a producing oil well, with an estimated
life of 15 years, and started operating it immediately. The management of GAZ
Ltd. calculated the present value of future net cash flows from the well as
$1,500,000. The discount rate used was 10%, which is the companyโs expected
return on investment. During 2005, GAZ Ltd. recorded cash sales (net of
production costs) of $600,000. GAZ Ltd. also paid $50,000 cash dividends during
2000.
Required
a.
Prepare the income statement of GAZ Ltd. for the year ended December
31, 2005, using RRA.
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
b.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Prepare the balance sheet of GAZ Ltd. as at December 31, 2005, using
RRA.
c.
Summarize the perceived weaknesses of RRA accounting.
d.
Why does SFAS 69 require that a 10% discount rate should be used by all
oil and gas firms rather than allowing each firm to select its own discount rate?
2A-5 Rainy Ltd. operates under ideal conditions of uncertainty. Its cash flows depend
crucially on the weather. On January 1, 2010, Rainy acquired equipment to be
used in its operations. The equipment will last two years, at which time its
salvage value will be zero. Rainy financed the equipment purchase by issuing
common shares.
In 2010, net cash flows will be $700 if the weather is rainy and $200 if it is dry.
In 2011, cash flows will be $900 if the weather is rainy and $300 if it is dry. Cash
flows are received at year-end. In each year, the probability that the weather is
rainy is 0.3 and 0.7 that it is dry. The interest rate in the economy is 6% in both
years.
Rainy pays a dividend of $50 at the end of 2010.
Required
a.
In 2010, the weather is rainy. Prepare a balance sheet as at the end of
2010 and an income statement for 2010.
b.
If we attempt to apply the present value model under uncertainty to the
more realistic conditions under which accountants operate, the expected
present value calculations often become unreliable. Explain why.
c.
Explain why well-defined (i.e., โtrueโ) net income does not exist under the
realistic conditions under which accountants operate. In place of true net
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Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
income, what criterion have accountants adopted to guide their financial
accounting and reporting decisions?
Suggested Solutions to Additional Problems
2A-1. a.
Expected present value of asset on January 1, 2005:
๏ฃซ 5,000 5,000 ๏ฃถ
๏ฃซ 4,000 4,000 ๏ฃถ
๏ฃซ 3,000 3,000 ๏ฃถ
0.50 ๏ฃฌ
+
+ 0.20 ๏ฃฌ
+
+ 0.30 ๏ฃฌ
+
2 ๏ฃท
2 ๏ฃท
2 ๏ฃท
๏ฃญ 1.10 1.10 ๏ฃธ
๏ฃญ 1.10 1.10 ๏ฃธ
๏ฃญ 1.10 1.10 ๏ฃธ
= $2,603.31 + 2,082.65 + 1,735.54
= $6,421.50
Expected present value of asset on December 31, 2005, given โgoodโ economy:
5,000/1.10 = $4,545.45
Note: PV of bonds payable = $3,000 (equal to face value because market
interest rate equals coupon rate)
b.
XYZ Ltd.
Income Statement
For the Year Ended December 31, 2005
Accretion of discount [(6,421.50 โ 3,000) ร .10]
$5,000.00
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$342.15
Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Abnormal earnings
Actual cash flow, 2005
$5,000,00
Expected cash flow, 2005
(4,000 ร 0.30 + 3,000 ร 0.50 + 5,000 ร 0.20)
3,700.00
Expected cash flow 2006, at Dec. 31, 2005
5,000.00
Expected cash flow 2006, at Jan. 1, 2005
3,700.00
1,300.00
1,300.00
Present value at Dec. 31, 2005
1,300/1.10
Net income
1,181.80
$2,823.95
c.
XYZ Ltd.
Balance Sheet
As at December 31, 2005
Financial Asset
Cash (note 1)
Liabilities
$3,288.02
Capital Asset,
At present value
Bonds payable
$3,000.00
Shareholdersโ Equity
4,545.45
Opening balance
3,421.50
Retained earnings (note 2) 1,411.97
4,833.47
$7,833.47
Notes:
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$7,833.47
Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
1.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Cash = revenues (5,000.00) – interest expense (300.00) – dividends
(1,411.98 (1/2 of net income of 2,823.95))
2.
Retained earnings = net income (2,823.95) – dividends (1,411.98)
d.
Present value-based financial statements under ideal conditions of
uncertainty are relevant because balance sheet values are based on expected
future cash flows and dividend irrelevancy holds.
They are reliable because present value calculations are representationally
faithful. That is, since all states of nature are identified and have known, objective
probabilities, the state realization is observable, and the economy-wide interest
rate is known, present value calculations precisely represent asset and liability
values, and cannot be biased by managers.
e.
Investors are indifferent across dividend policies under ideal conditions
because cash retained and dividends distributed to investors earn the same
known rate of return. Thus, regardless of the firmsโ dividend policy, investorsโ
total wealth (the sum of dividends and value of share holdings in the firm) is
independent of that dividend policy. Amounts not paid out as dividends remain
within the firm and earn the same rate of return for the shareholders.
2A-2. a.
First, calculate the cost of the specialized machinery at 1 Jan., 2005:
PA0 = 1/1.06[0.3 ร 600 + 0.7 ร 6000] + 1/(1.06)2[0.3 ร 400 + 0.7 ร 3000]
= .9434[180 + 4200] + .8900[120 + 2100]
= 4132.09 + 1975.80
= $6,107.89
Next, calculate the value of the machinery as at 1 Jan., 2006:
PA1 = 1/1.06[0.3 ร 400 + 0.7 ร 3000]
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= .9434[120 + 2100]
= $2,094.35
Relevant Ltd.
Balance Sheet
As at 31 December, 2005
Assets
Liabilities and Shareholdersโ Equity
Cash (6,000-120)
$5,880.00
Capital Asset, at
present value
2,094.35
Bank Loan
$2,000.00
Shareholdersโ Equity
Capital Stock $4,107.89
Retained
Earnings
1,866.46
5,974.35
$7,974.35
$7,974.35
Relevant Ltd.
Income Statement
For the Year Ended 31 December, 2005
Expected Net Income [6,107.89 โ 2,000 ร .06]
$246.46
Abnormal earnings
Actual Cash Flow
6,000.00
Expected Cash Flow
(600 ร 0.3 + 6,000 ร 0.7)
4,380.00
Net Income
b.
1,620.00
$1,866.46
Expected net income for 2006, evaluated as at 1 Jan., 2006 is:
$5,974.35 ร .06 = $358.46
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c.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
The financial statements are completely relevant because they are based
on the expected present value of future cash flows. Thus they give complete
information to investors about the firmโs future economic prospects. They are
completely reliable because the assumption of ideal conditions (essentially, that
the set of possible states of nature, cash flows resulting from each state, and
objective probabilities of the states, are publicly known) means that financial
statement items are representationally faithful, free of bias, and verifiable.
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2A-3. a.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
The discounted PV of the future income tax liability:
At the end of year 1
PA1 =
1,800 2,520 5,112 3,168
โ
โ
โ
1.12 1.12 2 1.12 3 1.12 4
= ($6,053.73)
At the end of year 2
PA2 = โ
2,520 5,112 3,168
โ
โ
1.12 1.12 2 1.12 3
= ($8,580.17)
At the end of year 3
PA3 = โ
5,112 3,168
โ
1.12 1.12 2
= ($7,089.80)
At the end of year 4
PA4 = โ
3,168
1.12
= ($2,828.57)
At the end of year 5
PA5 = 0
b.
It is because the balances calculated in part a are discounted to reflect
the PV of the future repayments of tax. This reduces their amounts.
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Scott, Financial Accounting Theory, 7th Edition
c.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
i) Repayment of the future income tax liability is triggered when capital
cost allowance falls below book amortization. Depending on the rate and time
pattern of the growth of capital assets, the future income tax liability may never
have to be actually repaid or, at least, the repayment could be postponed
indefinitely. This would happen if the pool of capital assets grows sufficiently
each year that capital cost allowance is always greater than straight-line
amortization.
ii) It is not clear what interest rate should be used for the discounting. A
risk-free rate, the firmโs borrowing rate, or cost of capital are possible
alternatives.
iii) Under the liability view of income tax timing differences, the future income tax
liability has to be adjusted for changes in the tax rate. Thus, for a completely
relevant present value calculation, changes in tax rates, and the timing of such
changes, would need to be anticipated. Lacking such anticipation, the future
income tax liability would have to be adjusted as tax rates change. This would
require considerable cost and effort, and would introduce volatility into reported
net income.
2A-4. a.
PV of future net cash flows, January 1, 2005
Less net sales during 2005
$1,500,000
600,000
900,000
Accretion of discount (10% of 1,500,000)
PV December 31, 2005
150,000
$1,050,000
GAZ Ltd.
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Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Income Statement
For the Year Ended December 31, 2005
Accretion of discount (1,500,000 ร .10)
$150,000
b.
GAZ Ltd.
Balance Sheet
As at December 31, 2005
Financial Asset
Shareholdersโ Equity
Cash (600,000 – 50,000) $550,000
Opening balance
$1,500,000
Capital Asset
Reserves, at
estimated P.V.
Retained earnings
1,050,000
(150,000 – 50,000)
$1,600,000
100,000
$1,600,000
c.
Weaknesses of RRA:
โข
The mandated discount rate of 10% might not reflect the actual risk and
return for GAZ Ltd. This reduces relevance.
โข
RRA involves making a large number of assumptions and estimates, with
respect to quantities and timing of their extraction. As a result, estimated
future RRA cash flows may bear little relationship to the net revenue the
company will receive in the future. This reduces relevance.
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โข
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Frequent, material changes in estimates reduce the reliability of the RRA
values.
โข
RRA requires year-end oil and gas prices, rather than prices
expected when it is anticipated the reserves will be lifted and sold.
This reduces relevance (although, it increases reliability).
d.
Use of a single 10% rate was mandated in SFAS 69 to improve
comparability across firms and over time for the same firm. The effect is to
decrease relevance, since firms cannot choose a discount rate most suitable to
their own riskiness and cost of capital. However, reliability is increased since
management cannot bias the present value calculations by its choice of discount
rate.
2A.5
a.
Expected present value of asset on January 1, 2010 and 2011:
900 ๏ฃน
๏ฃฎ 700
๏ฃฎ 200 300 ๏ฃน
PA0 = 0.3๏ฃฏ
+
+ 0.7 ๏ฃฏ
+
2 ๏ฃบ
2
๏ฃฐ1.06 1.06 ๏ฃป
๏ฃฐ1.06 1.06 ๏ฃบ๏ฃป
= 0.3(660.38 + 801.00 ) + 0.7(188.68 + 267.00 )
= 0.3 ร 1,461.38 + 0.7 ร 455.68
= 438.41 + 318.98
= 757.39
900
300
+ 0.7 ร
1.06
1.06
= 0.3 ร 849.06 + 0.7 ร 283.02
PA1 = 0.3 ร
= 254.72 + 198.11
= 452.83
Rainy Ltd.
Balance sheet
As at December 31, 2010
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Cash (700 โ 50)
$650.00
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
Shareholdersโ equity
Capital asset, at
Capital stock (PA1)
present value
$757.39
452.83
Retained earnings (395.44 โ 50) 345.44
$1,102.83
$1,102.83
Rainy Ltd.
Income Statement
For the year ended December 31, 2010
Expected net income (accretion of discount) (757.39 ร .06)
$45.44
Abnormal earnings
Expected cash flow (0.3 ร 700) + (0.7 ร 200) = (210 + 140) $350.00
Actual cash flow
700.00
Net income for the year
b.
350.00
$395.44
The main reason why the present value calculations may become
unreliable is that objective state probabilities are not available. Consequently,
subjective probabilities must be assessed. However, these are subject to error
and bias. Consequently, they are low in reliability.
Other reasons include the lack of a single interest rate in the economy, identifying
the set of states of nature, and possible non-observability of the state realization.
All of these introduce additional sources of error and bias into the present value
calculations, reducing reliability.
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c.
Instructorโs Solutions Manual Chapter 2
A main reason is incomplete markets. Then, income cannot be measured
by the change in the market values of the firmโs assets and liabilities.
Lacking complete markets, fair value estimates or discounted present values
must be used to value assets and liabilities. However, such estimates and
calculations are low in reliability, resulting in major adjustments to previous yearsโ
estimates. If true net income existed, there would be no adjustments.
In view of these problems, accountants have retained historical cost for major
asset and liability classes and adopted criteria of decision usefulness and full
disclosure.
67
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